IE7 – CSS Compatibility Needs Improvement

I have been trying to tweak this blog so that it will render correctly in IE7. Why is IE7 so bad at rendering CSS. It works fine in Firefox.

I think it is because they have to do something different. The problem that I had is that it has a bug in background-image and background-color command in CSS. It hides text that should float over it.

I have done a work-around and it displays as close as I can get it now. But IE7 needs to improve its CSS rendering or people will continue to move away from it.

Tech’s 2006 Foot-in-Mouth Awards

Wired News has posted its Foot-in-the-Mouth Awards. Their number one list was President Bush discussing Google Earth. How could they put this first over their second choice, Ted Stevens talk about tubes?

Senator Stevens whole tubes speech was totally idiotic and shows that he really does not have a clue on how the Internet works or how it should be run. Doubly scary is that he was in charge of the committee that oversaw the legislation that would remove net neutrality.

I am glad that this did not pass.

read more | digg story

Say No to Ads on Verizon Phones

The New York Times had a story today that discusses that Verizon Wireless just announced that they are going to allow the use of banner ads on their Internet phones next to news, sports, and weather links.

As an Internet phone user, I think that this is ridiculous. My rates won’t go down because of this and I might end up paying more over the long-run because I have to pay for the data that I download.

Verizon needs to re-think the use of this. If they want to make this work, they better not charge me to download the ad or they need to reduce the amount that I pay for using their data plan.

Or better, stop restricting my phone and let me use all the functions that are built in. Stop restricting me and forcing me to use your services. I pay a lot every month to you already, don’t do it.

There is more mobile content out there for people this year and it will continue to grow. But should we be forced to watch generic ads that Verizon uses? Are they going to push ads on other users websites that I am surfing to? When I surf on my mobile phone, I am looking for specific information.

One of the sites that I visit is ESPN’s mobile site, got to keep up on the scores, and they have discreet ads on their site. I see the ads, but they don’t slow me down.

Here is a link to the Dreaded Purple Master’s blog on this issue, “Tread carefully, Verizon“. MIT Convergence Culture Consortium has another look at this. “Verizon Takes Cautious Step into Mobile Advertising” discusses Verizon’s cautious approach to this plan.

To see them all, you can see Technorati’s Search Results.

As a Verizon customer, I hope this goes away. But I don’t think it will. It should be tasteful and not cost me anything to get the ads.

Navteq to Buy Traffic.com

Today, Navteq announced that it was going to buy Traffic.com for $179 million. Their goal is to bring maps to life.

My question is if they are going to do that, why are they buying Traffic.com? Traffic.com’s service is horrible. Here in Denver their reports are bad and generic. They tell you there is a problem, but not what the problem is and what to expect. They use a weird rating system to rate how bad the traffic is, but it is not relevant to anything and they don’t tell you how long it was going to take to get where you are going.

Navteq could have done better with different technology. Traffic.com is a site that should just go away.